Uncle Pirate
By Douglas Rees and Tony Auth
3.5/5
()
About this ebook
Set sail for a classroom adventure from mollymockery to mathematics in this story of a boy who has what every kid wants -- a pirate for an uncle.
Douglas Rees
The life of Douglas Rees is not a subject he cares to get into deeply. "BORING," he says. Nonetheless, he admits to having been born, and claims the event took place at March Air Force Base in California "Rather a long time ago now." At the age of twelve, he decided that he wanted to be a writer, and spent the next thirty-five years taking intermittent stabs at it. Meanwhile, he worked at various kinds of teaching, spent a year as a hospital orderly, drove something like an ambulance, washed dishes, took inventories, told stories, and was part owner of a ballet school (he can't dance). He got married, got divorced, and got married again (to different people). In his midthirties he went to library school at Berkeley just before they closed it down ("Not my fault," he insists), and currently works as a young adult librarian at the south end of San Francisco Bay. He has one wife and too many cats. Besides Majix, he has written nine other published books, including Lightning Time, Smoking Mirror, and Vampire High, which won various honors, and Grandy Thaxter's Helper, Uncle Pirate, and The Janus Gate, which didn't. He is not particularly weird, but some of the things in Majix, like the smoking scene, are things he has actually done. His favorite music is oatmeal cookies, and his favorite food is turquoise. If you place him near a body of flowing water, he will probably stare at it contentedly without wandering off until you want him again. This cannot be absolutely guaranteed, however. He is notorious for getting lost. He prefers to plead the Twenty-first Amendment in answer to all other questions.
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Reviews for Uncle Pirate
12 ratings2 reviews
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5For once, Wilson is almost cheered by the Bad News Pie his mom is making--maybe whatever news she has will keep his parents from noticing that his glasses are broken. Again. Lucky for him, Mom's news is just distracting enough: her long-lost brother has been found, and is coming to stay with them. Wilson is shocked when his uncle arrives: he's not just a relative, he's a pirate, and he travels with a talking penguin. Captain Jack (the penguin) wants to learn to read, and Uncle Pirate (Bob) needs to adjust to life on land, so it's off to Wilson's elementary school--the most un-shipshape place imaginable. That is, until Uncle Pirate takes over as Captain....
This is a goofy, humorous story, reminiscent of the Wayside School books. Early readers will enjoy Uncle Pirate's nautical vocabulary, and will likely adopt "arh" and "matey" into their own speech. The zaniness of the school's faculty is at odds with the realistic portrayal of Wilson and his family, which makes one or the other seem wrong for the book, but kids will get a kick out of this wacky story regardless. - Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Great blend of the mundane and the fanciful for young readers. Living in a condo with a talking penguin and a pirate. And a school named after a teacher driven insane by the students! Arrg!
Book preview
Uncle Pirate - Douglas Rees
Bad News Pie
There was pumpkin pie for dessert that night. My mom makes the best pumpkin pie in the world. Whenever she does it, I get worried because she only makes it when there’s bad news. Dad and I call it Bad News Pie.
I was worried even though her bad news might be good news for me. I’d gotten in another fight at school and my glasses were broken again. I have more pairs of broken glasses than any other kid in the history of fourth grade. There is something about being named Wilson, and being small, and wearing glasses, that makes kids with names like Scott or Jason think they can beat you up. They are usually right.
My parents have to spend a lot of money on glasses. This is bad because we do not have a lot of money.
Maybe a Bad News Pie meant that no one would notice my glasses were broken until after they’d heard
about the thing that made Mom bake the pie. Then a pair of broken glasses might not seem so bad.
But I was still worried.
As soon as she took the pie out of the oven, Dad said, Who died?
And I said, Uh-oh.
Mom smiled at us with a big, fake smile.
No one’s dead, you sillies,
she said. In fact, someone’s alive. Just look.
She put the pie down in front of us and took a piece of paper off the refrigerator. It was an important-looking letter, printed on special paper. She handed it to Dad.
From the navy?
Dad said. We don’t know anyone in the navy.
Just read it out loud so Wilson can hear it,
Mom said.
‘Dear Ms. Johnson,’
Dad read, ‘We found your brother on an island off Antarctica. He said he’d been marooned there for a long time. He had a fishing pole and a penguin with him. Since we didn’t know what to do with him, we are sending him to you. He should be there in a couple of days. Sincerely, the U.S. Navy. PS: We are also sending the penguin.’
Dad put down the letter.
I don’t think you ever said you had a brother,
he said to Mom.
I sort of forgot,
Mom said.
How could you forget you had a brother?
I asked.
He was a lot older than I was,
Mom said. And he ran away to sea when I was little.
This is very strange,
I said. The navy has sent me an uncle.
Do you have any other forgotten relatives I should know about?
said Dad.
No,
said Mom. Just the brother.
Where are we supposed to put him?
Dad asked.
Our condo is very small. You can almost open the refrigerator from the living room. My bedroom is the size of a really big box. There are nice houses around us, but they cost a lot. We can’t afford one. We couldn’t afford one even if I didn’t need so many glasses.
Dad looked at the letter again.
It’s six days old,
he said. The navy said he’d be here in a couple of days. I wonder if he got lost.
Just then there was a knock on the front door.
I’ll get it,
we all said at once.
We walked to the door in a little knot.
I’m the daddy. I’ll handle this,
Dad said.
He opened the door, and there stood the biggest trick-or-treater I had ever seen. He wore a pirate costume, with a big black hat, a patch over one eye, a peg leg, a long red coat, a cutlass, and two old-fashioned flintlock pistols in his belt.
But this was March and he was no kid. He was a rough, red old man with a beard, and a wooden chest at his feet.
Then I saw the penguin. It came out from behind him. It was one of those big penguins. It must have been four feet tall.
Permission to come aboard!
shouted the man.
Uncle
—I gulped it out—Uncle…Pirate?
Aye, aye,
he said. Uncle Pirate I be. Be you me sister Emmy’s boy?
Aye, aye,
I answered.
Then ye be my nevvy,
the pirate said. What be yer name, Nevvy?